Constituency is the conscience of the present

Wednesday

Aug 8, 2018 at 6:00 AM

By George F. Will

"Science, like the Mississippi, begins in a tiny rivulet in the distant forest."

- Abraham Flexner

In 1933, when America's most famous immigrant settled in Princeton, New Jersey, Franklin Roosevelt tried to invite Albert Einstein to the White House. Abraham Flexner, the founding director of the Institute for Advanced Study that had brought Einstein to Princeton, intercepted FDR's letter before the intended recipient saw it. Flexner declined the invitation and rebuked Roosevelt: "Professor Einstein has come to Princeton for the purpose of carrying on his scientific work in seclusion, and it is absolutely impossible to make any exception which would inevitably bring him into public notice." Robbert Dijkgraaf, the institute's current director, says that subsequently "Einstein made sure he personally answered all of his mail."

Dijkgraaf recounts this episode in a slender volume that, read in the right government places, might inoculate the nation against philistine utilitarianism. In the volume, which reprints Flexner's 1939 essay in Harper's magazine, "The Usefulness of Useless Knowledge," Dijkgraaf notes that the April 1939 opening of the World's Fair in New York featured such marvels as an automatic dishwasher, an air conditioner and a fax machine. There was no intimation of electronic computers or nuclear energy.

Flexner's theme, says Dijkgraaf, was the practicality of "unobstructed curiosity" that sails "against the current of practical considerations." The 1953 discovery of the structure of DNA, which led to the 1970s arrival of recombinant DNA technology and to today's biotech industry and pharmacology, was the result of scientific curiosity "without any thoughts of immediate applications."

Flexner, who died in 1959 at age 92, recalled asking a great philanthropist who he considered the world's "most useful worker in science." When the philanthropist said "Marconi," Flexner responded:

It has been said that the great moments in science occur not when a scientist exclaims "Eureka!" but when he or she murmurs "That's strange." Flexner thought the most fertile discoveries come from scientists "driven not by the desire to be useful but merely the desire to satisfy their curiosity." He wanted to banish the word "use" in order to encourage institutions of learning to be devoted more to "the cultivation of curiosity" and less to "considerations of immediacy of application." It is axiomatic that knowledge is the only resource that increases when used, and it is a paradox of prosperity that nations only reap practical innovations from science by regarding them as afterthoughts, coming long after basic science.

As 10,000 baby boomers retire each day into the embrace of the entitlement state, rapid economic growth becomes more imperative and, because of the increasing weight of the state, more difficult to maintain. Entitlement spending and the cost of servicing the surging national debt increasingly crowd out rival claims on scarce public resources, including those for basic science. Because it is politically expedient to sacrifice the future, which does not vote, to the consumption of government services by those who do, America is eating its seed corn.

The future's vital, and only, constituency is the conscience of the present. Testifying to Congress in 1969 concerning the possible Cold War utility of a particular particle accelerator, the physicist Robert Wilson said: "This new knowledge has all to do with honor and country, but it has nothing to do directly with defending our country, except to help make it worth defending."

George F. Will writes a column for The Washington Post.

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